Announced in February this year ahead of a Spring launch, Huawei's Ascend G300 has been somewhat overshadowed by the company's bigger announcements including the Ascend P1 S and Ascend D Quad.

The G300 may not have the premium finish of those other models we mentioned but for the price of only £100 on pre-pay this is a very impressive offering from Huawei, which is trying to establish itself more firmly in the UK market.

Starting with the externals, this is probably the area where most has been sacrificed to keep costs down. For one thing, this is quite a chunky handset by current standards, the spec sheet says 10.5mm but by some accidental optical illusion its looking decidedly on the hefty side.

Fortunately, this doesn't translate into device weight, which is very light in the hand at around 140g. This is no doubt in part due to the materials used - the battery cover section of the back panel and the front bezel are both made of a silvery plastic with a reasonably good quality feel to them which, in truth, almost had us thinking it was aluminium at first.

But it doesn't stand up to the scratch test - gently scratching at the surface with a fingernail gives a distinctly plasticky feel and removing the battery cover shows that it is actually made of a fairly bendy piece of grey plastic with a metallic coating on the outside.

Overall we found the G300 had a very solid build quality with a sturdy feel in the hand.

Our review model was the white coloured version, which means that the small remaining sections of the back panel which aren't the silver battery cover look a bit weird, in our view. We didn't like the silver and white model but it also comes in a silver and black scheme which we think would look great. The coloured plastic appears to be of a similarly decent quality as the silver panels.

Minor details can often be some of the most pleasing parts of a phone's design and one feature we're fond of is the inclusion of a micro USB charging port at the bottom of the handset. This means it can stand upright on a charging dock and is much more convenient.

Likewise we appreciate that the G300 is fitted with capacitive touch buttons rather than physical keys as it's a much slicker way of doing things. However, we did notice that these could be rather temperamental when using the phone.

This may be a long-term problem with key sensitivity or it could just be a case of needing to get used to the placement of the sensors and where you actually need to press.

Moving on, we'll now talk about the internal hardware and the software it runs.

Huawei has opted for Google's Androidplatform and the G300 is using version 2.3 Gingerbread with its own interface overlay on top. This is being powered by a single core 1GHz processor with 512MB of RAM and performance is surprisingly good.